The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Cash-strapped Britons gambling on quick fix

- JOSIE CLARKE

Financiall­y desperate Britons are increasing­ly turning to gambling as a “quick fix” as wealth levels fall to historic lows, a study suggests.

The annual LifeSearch Health, Wealth and Happiness Index compiled by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) fell 11% over the last year to lows not seen since the height of the pandemic.

The wealth index fell to the lowest level since 2013, with 52% of people feeling worse off than they did a year ago.

Almost one in three Britons (29%) have had to raid their savings over the past year to cover rising living costs, one in 12 (8%) have had to ask their families for money and one in 10 (11%) have been forced to take on more debt, a survey for the study found.

The figures show a stark increase in gambling on a year ago, when around a third of people said they had gambled at least once over the past year, spending an average of £43 a month.

Almost 1.5 million people (3%) this year admitted they had turned to gambling as a “quick fix” solution to their financial problems, upping either the frequency or the amount they gamble or both in the past 12 months and spending an average of £268 more each month.

Men are twice as likely to be gambling more now than they were a year ago, while younger people are also more at risk and are already more likely to gamble in the first place.

Last year, 46% of 18 to 34-year-olds said they gambled – significan­tly higher than the UK average of 32%. Additional­ly, one in 20 (5%) under-35s are gambling more compared to just one in 100 (1%) people aged 55 and over.

Ministers are undertakin­g the most comprehens­ive review of gambling laws in 15 years to ensure they are fit for the digital age, following an explosion in online betting and a string of high-profile cases where customers have suffered huge losses or taken their own lives.

Gambling companies are to be forced to step up checks on punters “to better protect even those unable to afford small losses” under plans to tackle addiction announced in last month’s gambling white paper.

Plans also include maximum stakes for online slot machines of between £2 and £15 for all customers, subject to consultati­on and a new statutory levy which will see gambling companies required to fund more groundbrea­king research, education and treatment.

Emma Walker, of LifeSearch, said: “Many people have had to adjust their spending to cope with the soaring cost of living, with 29% forced to use their savings while others feel they have cut back so much that they have run out of options, which is perhaps why many are turning to gambling to find a ‘quick fix’, made so much easier by the multitude of online gambling options available.

“Research shows that men and younger people are most at risk. Under-35s are more likely to gamble in the first place, more likely to have upped their habit in the past year and spend more than other age groups.”

Opinium surveyed 3,006 UK adults between April 4-10.

Many feel they have cut back so much that they have run out of options

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom